The Preaching Consulting is Free

The Preaching Consulting is now Free.

I’ve been exploring Preaching Consulting for the better part of a year now and have come to two conclusions.

First, I believe wholeheartedly in the benefits of getting direct feedback on one’s preaching.

I have seen the impact and heard that the people I have worked with have seen immediate benefits to their weekly preaching. I know that this close look at one’s preaching gives a preacher a place to start to grow and work toward improving their preaching.

Second, the benefits out way the costs.

By this I mean, I believe in preaching consulting so much that I no longer want to charge for it.

We are co-labourers, and I want to join with the average pastor to encourage and strengthen their ministry. I don’t want to be another person offering a program or advertising to take your money. I want to help, and the benefits of working with pastors are worth my time.

This does mean some changes to how I structure things here on The Preaching Consultant.

For now, it means that I am scaling back opportunities for consulting and focusing on offering only “One Sermon Consults.”

The content on the site, regarding articles and interviews, will continue with no interruption. I encourage you to sign up to my email list to receive these updates.

Finally, I will be exploring some options to help fund these efforts. The website, the posts, and now the services have a cost, and if you are interested in supporting me in this effort, I invite you to donate. With that in mind, I have set up a Patreon account to manage that kind of support. That said, don’t worry. There isn’t a plan to constantly ask for donations. Instead, I consider this an opportunity to accept help, but it will not be my sole focus.

I hope that I can continue to offer help to the average preacher and to be an encouragement and support to the local church. And I look forward to what that will look like in the years to come.

You’ve been feeling the pressure from all sides when it comes to your preaching. Your congregation looks bored most Sundays, you aren’t sure if anyone is listening, and a member of the board has been subtly suggesting that the question is about to move from “how you preach” towards “if you’ll be preaching in the long term.”